I liked it. My natural question would be, how did you have the cajones to fly where you probably could not see the drone? Did you get it back by RTH? I would have been freaked out about losing my drone in the dark. I would have flown straight up and then straight down, or have a coronary.
I liked it. My natural question would be, how did you have the cajones to fly where you probably could not see the drone? Did you get it back by RTH? I would have been freaked out about losing my drone in the dark. I would have flown straight up and then straight down, or have a coronary.
You do not have to convince e me of the great imagery of night flying. I drool with jealousy every time I see one of these night videos. I do have the Firehouse Technology arc lights and I use them all the time. My baby (Mavic 2) is now on its way to DJI Texas for gimbal repair (UPS says it gets there tomorrow). As soon as I get it back I'll try a straight up, straight down flight at 100fet above my head in my driveway, and then start from there.If you're not flying at night, you're missing some great imagery.
You certainly need to have a different mind set when flying at night, but believe it or not, it's easier to see at night. You also have all of your telemetry on your controller, so you know exactly where your drone is.
Take it slow and increase your distance. Make sure you have scouted your area for power lines, trees, and other obstacles. Even though anti-collision lights aren't required for hobbyists, it's a good idea. Firehouse Technology has a great one called "Spark". (best drone strobe light)
But do learn to safely fly at night, it will open up a whole new world.
I would have rotated the gimbal to a more downward position, so that the sky did not occupy half of the view. That caused the lower part of the picture, the interesting part, to be be underexposed. It you aim it so the sky is just a small part of the scene, the ground part will have much more detail.
Exactly. I have been harping on this with allow videos submitted on this forum, if you may have noticed.I would have rotated the gimbal to a more downward position, so that the sky did not occupy half of the view. That caused the lower part of the picture, the interesting part, to be be underexposed. It you aim it so the sky is just a small part of the scene, the ground part will have much more detail.
I would have rotated the gimbal to a more downward position, so that the sky did not occupy half of the view. That caused the lower part of the picture, the interesting part, to be be underexposed. It you aim it so the sky is just a small part of the scene, the ground part will have much more detail.
Those methods are absolutely correct, however, my suggestion is easy, it works very well, and the composition is much improved by not having half of the picture being a bright blank sky.That can also be fixed two different ways. If someone doesn't understand how to take their drone off of automatic, they can change the EV. Or, the better way is to learn how to read a histogram and keep your drone in manual exposure.
There is actually a third or even a 4th way! Firstly, shoot in RAW to allow development of more detail in the dark areas in post production. Also, graduated filter can open cup darker areas in foreground.That can also be fixed two different ways. If someone doesn't understand how to take their drone off of automatic, they can change the EV. Or, the better way is to learn how to read a histogram and keep your drone in manual exposure.
Also correct, but way more complicated, and it doesn't address the composition issue.There is actually a third or even a 4th way! Firstly, shoot in RAW to allow development of more detail in the dark areas in post production. Also, graduated filter can open cup darker areas in foreground.
I agree. Further zip up quick and check out your scene without recording. Change any settings or angle of the gimbal (make a degree note if you want a different position while ascending), then land and start recording your flight from the deck. I say this because many people like to record from take off. This way, with a quick 30 second dry run; you can make necessary corrections and adjustments and look like a pro with the finished product.Those methods are absolutely correct, however, my suggestion is easy, it works very well, and the composition is much improved by not having half of the picture being a bright blank sky.
RAW is for still photos only and would be DNG on DJI. D-LOG would be the video equivalent, which is only available on a few of the DJI cameras. Graduated filter works well for both stills and video, to lower the dynamic range of the scene, which always benefits the small sensors used on our drones.There is actually a third or even a 4th way! Firstly, shoot in RAW to allow development of more detail in the dark areas in post production. Also, graduated filter can open cup darker areas in foreground.
I would have rotated the gimbal to a more downward position, so that the sky did not occupy half of the view. That caused the lower part of the picture, the interesting part, to be be underexposed. It you aim it so the sky is just a small part of the scene, the ground part will have much more Think again...... try.
For fun, no monetary thing going on here.There is actually a third or even a 4th way! Firstly, shoot in RAW to allow development of more detail in the dark areas in post production. Also, graduated filter can open cup darker areas in foreground.
Litchi control. no gimbal control from 2.5 miles from home. Do you know Litchi?Those methods are absolutely correct, however, my suggestion is easy, it works very well, and the composition is much improved by not having half of the picture being a bright blank sky.
Not trying to be a pro, just what a simple man can do.I agree. Further zip up quick and check out your scene without recording. Change any settings or angle of the gimbal (make a degree note if you want a different position while ascending), then land and start recording your flight from the deck. I say this because many people like to record from take off. This way, with a quick 30 second dry run; you can make necessary corrections and adjustments and look like a pro with the finished product.
DoesThat can also be fixed two different ways. If someone doesn't understand how to take their drone off of automatic, they can change the EV. Or, the better way is to learn how to read a histogram and keep your drone in manual exposure.
I liked it. My natural question would be, how did you have the cajones to fly where you probably could not see the drone? Did you get it back by RTH? I would have been freaked out about losing my drone in the dark. I would have flown straight up and then straight down, or have a coroI trust Litchi.I liked it. My natural question would be, how did you have the cajones to fly where you probably could not see the drone? Did you get it back by RTH? I would have been freaked out about losing my drone in the dark. I would have flown straight up and then straight down, or have a coronary.
i trust Litchi.I liked it. My natural question would be, how did you have the cajones to fly where you probably could not see the drone? Did you get it back by RTH? I would have been freaked out about losing my drone in the dark. I would have flown straight up and then straight down, or have a coronary.
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